The Gift of Hope

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

The Gift of Hopeapple

by Jennifer Crow

“Hope,” said Emily Dickinson, “is the thing with feathers.” Fragile is the first thing that comes to mind after that. Maybe you’ve held a bird’s slight weight in your hands, felt the fast, faint beat of its heart against your fingertips, the grip of its tiny feet. I fill the feeder outside my kitchen window and watch the birds flit and dance on the wing, and I wonder how something so tiny can survive a Buffalo winter.

Hope seems like that sometimes: beautiful, but too easily startled. Too delicate to endure the rough handling of time and fate. At times, I’ve felt like I was holding nothing but a lifeless bundle of feathers, the world’s small and large disasters too much for hope. And yet somehow, when ruins-excavation-coverI’ve reached the point of despairing, it always stirs, lifts its wings, and hops a little to show me it’s too soon to give up just yet.

This month I’m blogging about gifts, in particular things that make my life better which I can’t stick a bow on. And having struggled with depression for the better (or maybe worse) part of the past decade, it seems to me that hope is one of those things that none of us—especially the creative types—can live without. That sensation beating like wings in my chest, that flutter where it seemed life had been extinguished, makes the cold, shadowy times bearable.

It seemed appropriate to talk about the gift of hope right after the longest night of the year. It gets dark so early in western New York. On the gray days, it hardly seems as though the sun’s come up at all. From this point on, though, it gets brighter. The cold will still seep down to my bones for a few more months, but the worst will pass. I’ll bundle up, fill the bird feeder, and the chickadees and nuthatches will keep me company.

Last year a four-day storm dumped more than 80 inches of snow in my yard. The year before that, temperatures dipped below -20 Fahrenheit for what seemed an eternity. Through all that, the little birds fluffed up their feathers and found a way. Just like hope.

Check out Jennifer’s work in The First Bite of the Apple and Ruins Excavation.

Enter to win the Giftmas Giveaway!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

The Curse of the Perfect Holiday

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

 

The Curse of the Perfect Holiday

by Jay Wilburn

I write a lot of horror. You might be surprised how often horror publishers are looking for holiday related stories each year. Usually these involve ghosts or some species of monster wreaking havoc. The true horror though is usually found in the ghosts we invent to haunt us from our own pasts or the monsters we create within ourselves.

While Moby Dick is about the obsession of endlessly chasing the White Whale, our curses might be chasing the White Christmas. The captain at the beginning of that story talked about getting the desire each year to knock people’s hats off and to cause other mischief in response to others’ joy upon the land. This was his signal that it was time to return to the sea. Even in this early part of the novel, the symbolism of self-destruction is used to describe this desire. It may describe out unease as the holidays approach.

Our desire for the perfect holiday season may be the same alien feeling in our lives that the captain felt stuck on land. We know in our hearts that no family is perfect, but we desire to capture perfection within our own family for a little while. We want this perfection for ourselves or for loved ones that we have let down or that we sense see us as a let down. We might want to spare our children from holiday disappointments we fear in our own lives. There are kernels of memory surrounding moments through the years that hint at the perfection. They draw us deeper into that desire and then the cold reality of all our imperfections plague us through the holidays.

Let me tell you what you already know. There is no perfect family and no perfect holiday. If there is joy in the world to be found, it is found despite and through our imperfections. Others may live in disappointment no matter how much we come to embrace this truth, but we can still find joy in that imperfection as well. Peace is often associated with rest and rest is a gift we can either grant or deny ourselves at all times. The act of wanting to show love to those that don’t deserve it in your life is a beautiful thing in all its pain and imperfection. The act of forgiving someone that does not warrant such a thing is freeing, but never easy. Finding a bright moment when there is so much darkness to be seen in our lives and in the world is divine.

The depression that can take hold of people this time of year reflects the magnification of our emotions around the holidays. The imperfection of our imperfect lives can be magnified as well. It is further intensified by those we do have around us during these emotional times and those we don’t have around.

Give yourself permission to find joy and rest despite the imperfection. Allow yourself to enjoy small moments of light and happiness even when darkness seems to be winning.

Your holiday does not have to be perfect in order to be perfect. So, I wish you and yours a joyfully and restfully imperfect holiday season.

Enter the Rafflecopter for a ton of prizes connected to the tour. Do it!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Check out Jay Wilburn’s excited apocalyptic series. Dead Song Legend Dodecology Book 1: January from Milwaukee to Muscle Shoals
Start the series here  http://amzn.to/1CvxbST

Dead Song Legend Dodecology Book 2: February from Vicksburg to Cherokee
Continue the series here  http://jaywilburn.com/book-2/

Check out the first soundtrack to the series, The Sound May Suffer: Music from the Dead Song here  http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/thesoundmaysuffer6
or on Spotify. The hard CD is also available on Amazon.

Visit: http://jaywilburn.com/

Jay Wilburn lives with his wife and two sons in Conway, South Carolina near the Atlantic coast of the southern United States. He has a Masters Degree in education and he taught public school for sixteen years before becoming a full time writer. He is the author of many short stories including work in Best Horror of the Year volume 5, Zombies More Recent Dead, Middletown Apocalypse, and Truth or Dare. He is the author of the Dead Song Legend Dodecology and the music of the five song soundtrack recorded as if by the characters within the world of the novel The Sound May Suffer. He also wrote the novels Loose Ends and Time Eaters. He is one of the four authors behind the Hellmouth trilogy. Jay Wilburn is a regular columnist with Dark Moon Digest. Follow his many dark thoughts on Twitter, Instagram, and Periscope as @AmongTheZombies, his Facebook author page, and at JayWilburn.com

A Corny Holiday

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

 

A Corny Holiday

by Brenda Stokes Barron

Normally, I shy away from blog tours because I’m so strapped for time. But when Rhonda asked if I wanted to be a part of this project, I had to say yes. It’s the holidays and sharing in the fun and festivities while celebrating being writers and being a part of this awesome community was just too appealing to pass up.

While the temptation to wax nostalgic is strong this time of year, I’ll resist and offer a recipe instead. It’s simple and tasty, though full of butter. So, it’s not healthy at all. But…umm…yum?

Corn Casserole Souffle

A weird name for a recipe, I know, but it’s really a combination of my mom’s recipe (corn casserole) and one I found online (corn souffle) that I’ve been making for several years now. It’s rich, filling, and I could eat it pretty much forever.

Ingredients 

4 oz butter (one stick, melted)

1 egg

8 oz sour cream

1 can of whole kernel corn (drained)

1 can of cream style corn

1 pkg of corn muffin mix

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
  2. Combine butter, egg, corn, cream style corn, sour cream, and corn muffin mix in a bowl.
  3. Grease 9″ x 9″ baking dish and pour mixture into it.
  4. Bake for 45 minutes or until you can poke the center with a toothpick and it comes out clean.

Simple, easy, and super delicious. It ends up with the consistency of pudding and bread, is sweet and savory, and a great complement to other holiday dishes.

The Giveaway

There’s a seriously impressive list of prizes for this giveaway, which includes tons of books like Seeing the Light by E.C. Bell, I Heart Robot by Suzanne van Rooyen, and signed copies of Fae, Corvidae, and Scarecrow–all of which are edited by Rhonda Parrish. Plus, there are other nifty goodies in the giveaway, too, like art prints, electronic copies of books, and a coffee cup cozy knitted by yours truly. See the full list here.

Entering the giveaway is super easy. Just use the form below:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Thanks for reading! It was fun to be included in the tour and thanks to Rhonda for hosting me. 🙂

Advent Ghosts 2015

For the past few years I have enjoyed participating in I Saw Lightning Fall’s Advent Ghosts. It used to be that ghost stories (or just creepy stories) were a part of the holiday tradition, and Advent Ghosts is just one way to re-embrace that tradition, if only in a small way. The rules are that you’re supposed to write a scary/creepy/unnerving drabble and share it on your blog on the 19th. A drabble, for anyone scratching their head right now, is a story that is exactly 100 words long.

As with every year that I’ve participated my story this year is not a drabble–though I think it’s the shortest one I’ve ever shared for this event so who knows, maybe someday I’ll hit the mark 😉

file8791263155114

Trying to be Brave

by Rhonda Parrish

Though she could no longer hear it, Wren knew the beast was still out there somewhere, somewhere near—skulking, still and silent, among the cedars. She pressed her back harder against the tree trunk, praying it was wide enough to hide her, and tried to be brave.

She slowed her breathing—in, hold, out—and exhaled through her woolen mittens—in, hold, out—to keep feeling in her fingers and diffuse the cloud of breath that would give away her position.

In…

Hold…

Out…

She was trying to be brave—trying so hard to be brave—but Jack’s screams lingered, echoing inside her like the ding, dong, dong of the church bell. It would be ringing soon—the bell—but there was a frozen lake between her and it, and the beast was near.

But help wouldn’t be coming. She’d sneaked away, tip-toeing past her parents door while they still slumbered. Danced from shadow to shadow through the village, across the lake, to meet her love beneath the treetops to steal kisses and play at magic. Help wasn’t coming, because it didn’t know it was necessary.

And now, even the sun was retreating, soundlessly creeping across the sky to hide behind the treeline. She could stay and wait for the end—the sneaky, silent, forever sleep offered by the cold, or the screaming, struggling, steaming death of the beast—or she could run.

Wren took a couple good deep breaths—in, hold, out. The village needed to be warned. Needed to know what waited in the woods, what she and Jack had awakened.

With a whispered prayer Wren leapt from her hiding place and tried to be brave.


 

You can also read my past attempts at Advent Ghosts stories:

Come In (2013)

A Million Pieces (2014)

or check out the rest of this year’s entries at I Saw Lightning Fall.

 

Hot Buttered Rum

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

Hot Buttered Rum

by S. L. Saboviec

Hello, everyone! My name is S. L. Saboviec, and I’m a SFF author. I’m excited to be part of Rhonda’s Giftmas blog tour, and I’m so glad to be here today on her blog.

When I was growing up, my mother used to bake all the time. For Christmas, we had gingerbread houses and sugar cookies; for birthdays, we had homemade cake; for Thanksgiving, we had pumpkin and blueberry pie.

It’s a tradition I’ve continued. Although my daughter is only a year old, I’ve been baking my own treats around holidays for much longer than she’s been alive. And I love making new things.

Of course, I’m a grown-up now, or at least, that’s what people say a mortgage means.

Last year, I was listening to Christmas music, and I thought to myself, “Self, what is this ‘hot buttered rum’ of which the carols speak?” It sounded a bit old and fuddy-duddy; however, that’s also what I thought about Star Wars until I was forced to watch it in high school and therefore discovered its awesomeness. So, not wanting to be that girl that won’t try new (or, in this case, old) things, I googled “hot buttered rum recipe.”

Oh. Em. Gee.

Do you like sugary goodness? Do you like butter? Do you like easy-to-make alcoholic beverages that everyone’s going to be impressed over?

WELL, HOLD ONTO YOUR FANCY, OLD-FASHIONED HAT BECAUSE I HAVE A DRINK FOR YOU.

8245393647_8dcd1ed92a_z

Image by Dennis Wilkenson

The original recipe is from the Food Network, so you know it’s good. I halved it because, well, it is a lot of sugar/butter/rum. But you can make the mix ahead of time and keep it in the fridge for up to two weeks, so go ahead and quadruple this sucker if you want. Take it out, have a nip here and there, ya know, to warm you up when you come in from the snow.

Hot Buttered Rum
(Prep: 10 minutes. Makes 5-6 servings)

½ stick butter, softened
1 cup brown sugar
½ tsp ground cinnamon
Pinch ground cloves
Pinch salt

Also:
Rum
Boiling water

Cream together butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, cloves, and salt. Refrigerate until almost firm. Spoon about 2 tablespoons of the butter mixture into each mug. Pour about 3 ounces of rum (about 2 shots—yep, you read that right) into each mug, filling about halfway. Top with boiling water to fill the remaining half. Stir well. Serve immediately.

If you want to get all Martha Stewart on it, you can garnish with cinnamon sticks, whipped cream, and/or cinnamon sprinkles. But there’s a reason I didn’t pick the Martha Stewart recipe: I’m not that fancy.

And now you know what you’re making for tomorrow’s holiday party.

About Me:

fa7c28f1c29e422fe98df2d61fedc998I’m an author whose dark, thought-provoking science fiction & fantasy contains flawed, relatable characters and themes that challenge the status quo. My first release, Guarding Angel is available at several major eBook retailers and on Amazon in paperback: Kindle | Kobo | Nook | Google Play | Paperback (Amazon) | Goodreads. The sequel, Reaping Angel, will be released in spring 2016.

You can also follow me on social media: Twitter | Pinterest | FaceBook | My newsletter (No spam!).

Thank you, Rhonda, for having me here today!

Enter the Giveaway:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Winter is Coming

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

Winter is Coming

by S.L. Bynum

Strangely enough in North Carolina, where I live, it hasn’t gotten as cold as it usually does this time of year. By Thanksgiving, I’d barely taken out my winter coat. I didn’t even have to wear a coat in the daytime at the end of November, since it was still in the high sixties and seventies. Not that I’m complaining. I adore warm weather, the longer the better.

slow winter

But I know it’s still coming. It’s going to be time for wearing thick coats, gloves, and hats. Time for celebrating holidays, such as Christmas, Kwanzaa, and Hanukkah.

It’s also time for a break from working. For me, that would mean a break from my writing since I’m in the midst of completing the sequel to my book, Grim Crush. (I don’t get a break from my retail job…the only day I definitely don’t have to work is Christmas. I still have to work Thanksgiving and New Year’s.)

But winter always makes me think of traditions. Like baking Christmas cookies. Drinking eggnog. My mother recording “Rudolph: The Red-Nosed Reindeer” to our DVR for the 50th time. Wrapping presents. Putting up decorations. Drinking alcohol or sparkling apple cider on New Year’s Eve. Playing in the snow (if we get any) and freezing my butt off.

Now I want to hear from the readers out there. What does winter mean to you? What do you do to prepare for winter and the holidays?

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Santa Magic

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

Santa Magic

by Jaylee James

When I was a little girl, Christmas was An Event, and Santa was real. My little brother and I would wake up Christmas morning to find the cookies we had left out were half-eaten, with a trail of crumbs leading to the fireplace. There would be bitten off pieces of carrots in the ashes – we always left carrots out for the reindeer, because they’d need a snack, too, after carrying a heavy sleigh all night! – and, of course, a pile of presents under the tree.

We wrote letters to Santa, detailing the gifts we wanted, and our mom would [quickly copy the contents of the lists for future reference] help us put them into envelopes, address them to Santa Claus, North Pole, and pop them in the mailbox.

One year, Santa wrote back, giving us a chore chart of specific activities guaranteed to get us on the Nice List – brushing our teeth, eating our vegetables, making our bed – with reindeer sticker to chronicle our progress. I worked diligently, mailed back my completed chart, and was rewarded with my greatest wish that year: an astronaut Barbie.

I even had an elaborate plan in place to stash pillows and blankets behind the couch on Christmas Eve, then wait until my parents were in bed. I would creep down to the living room and sleep there until the sounds of sleigh bells and a fat man crawling out of our chimney would wake me up, and I could catch him in the act. (Unfortunately, my parents stayed up too late that year and I fell asleep before they did. Mom was perplexed to find half my bedding behind the couch the next day.)

When I was seven, I was flipping through a catalogue in the passenger seat of my mom’s minivan, and I saw a Ralph the Mouse VHS. Somehow, the way my mother worded her sentence – “Yeah, we got that for you last year, remember,” – set off alarm bells in my first grade brain.

“No mom, Santa gave it to me,” I clarified.

But the look on her face… I knew she was lying.

It was like the clouds parted, a lightbulb came on… lots of things suddenly made sense that never did before. Like how on earth did Santa get down our chimney when the flue was always closed? How did someone described repeatedly as obese manage to squeeze through our flue anyway, closed or otherwise?

Mom explained the whole deal, and that I should be quiet about it, since my brother didn’t know. It was almost more magical than Santa himself. I was in on something, part of a grown up conspiracy to create magic for the younger kids. Magic that didn’t exist, but that we made real through trickery and games. It was awesome.

I faithfully fulfilled my end of the bargain, breathing not a word of it for years.

Until, at last, tragedy struck.

My mom had been to Macy’s, and their holiday shopping bags said something to the effect of, “Santa’s gift bag” on it. My brother was confused, asking my Dad why they would say that. Santa didn’t shop at Macy’s. Santa didn’t shop at all.

And to my horror, instead of coming up with a plausible lie, my Dad sat my little brother down and told him the truth.

No.

You don’t just tell a kid Santa’s not real! That was Adult Conspiracy Top Secret Club Rule #1!

Christmas was ruined.

I ran upstairs with all of my ten-year-old outrage and threw myself on my mom’s bed. “He told him! Dad told him it wasn’t real!” I was heartbroken. “Does this mean we can’t have Santa anymore?”

My mom gave me a weird look. “Just because we’re not doing Santa anymore doesn’t mean you’ll never get Christmas presents. You’ll still get presents from me and your dad and your grandparents.”

She was entirely missing the point. “But no more cookies? No carrots for the reindeer or coming downstairs to a tree full of gifts that were all hidden the night before?” No more magic?

Mom quickly de-escalated the situation and promised that we could do Santa, and could keep doing Santa as long as I wanted.

Books and movies share this in common with the conspiracy of Santa Claus… they all create magic out of thin air. They tell a story, a fiction, and it draws you in. We do this as writers, just like parents do with their kids at Christmas. With nothing but words and imagination (and maybe a little bit of conspiratorial cooperation), we can make a miracle.

And that, kids, is why I am 26-years-old and still leave cookies out for Santa. Because I believe, wholeheartedly, in the magic of make believe.


choosing-youJaylee James is a writer of science fiction, fantasy, romance, and variations thereof. She is most well known as the Senior Editor of the LGBT lit mag Vitality Magazine. Her work has appeared in Wings of Renewal, a solarpunk dragon anthology, and her time-travel romance short, Choosing You, was released in November. Visit her at JayleeJames.com to learn more about her upcoming projects.

Wings of Renewal: http://amzn.to/1IjjbOE
Choosing You: http://amzn.to/1QOVjFd
Vitality: https://readvitality.com
Website: http://jayleejames.com

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Hitman Claus

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

 

Hitman Claus

by Kristina Brooks

If you were anything like me as a child, you probably wondered why a single man like Santa Claus would be given so much power. In fact, you might lie awake on Christmas and imagine all of the good and bad things that he could do with this power. This happened so often as I child that I developed my own Santa mythos. This would later translate into a story.

So, sit back and enjoy the tale of a Santa gone wrong. Oh, and don’t forget to enter in the Giftmas prize giveaway!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

Hitman Claus

The reindeer’s hooves touched down on the roof without stirring a snowflake. However, the brightly dressed, albeit grumpy, Santa could have cared less.

A few months ago he had gotten in deep with some major players. Now, he was forced to spread more than a little good cheer with his Christmas tradition. He slipped out from behind the reins and grabbed two small bags from the back of the sled before tromping his way over to the chimney.

He sighed and wiped the sweat from his brow despite the cold weather. His cheeks may have been as red as cherries, and his smile permanently plastered to his face, but that was just a side effect of the job.

As he waited, Donner snorted and stomped his hoof.

“Oh, just cool it, would you?” Santa snorted back, looking into the charcoal black eyes as if he expected an answer. After a brief staring contest, he turned his attention back to the chimney and muttered the chant that would magically transport him from the roof to the living room.

The inside of this home wasn’t that different from the millions of others. The tree was well decorated, stockings had been hung on the mantelpiece, and a tray of milk and cookies sat on the coffee table. He could even feel the presence of the children asleep in their beds. Janey had been a near angel that year, while her brother Joey had been something akin to a demon, but according to his rules of operation they would both get at least one gift; Joey’s would just be smaller.

He hadn’t been able to leave coal for children since the late nineteen hundreds when some idiot child had used the coal he’d gotten to bludgeon his younger sibling. The higher ups had decided that incident was too much bad publicity for Christmas and had immediately forbid him from handing it out anymore.

They only spoke up when they were reprimanding him or changing something, he never heard from the big bosses when they were happy. Hence, any letter arriving with their special seal only caused him immense worry and stress.

Much like the deed ahead of him.

After he took a couple of the cookies and, since he was lactose intolerant, poured the milk down the drain before making his way to the staircase; the second bag weighing heavily in his left hand.

The door to the master bedroom was ajar and he pushed it open without so much as a squeak. Not that it mattered much; when he entered a house the occupants were put under a trance by the same chant that transported him into their midst. They couldn’t wake up while he went about his duties. It was one of the reasons the mobsters he owed had chosen this task for him.

He hadn’t meant to get into so much debt. He was only allowed two weeks of free time a year, and somehow he had lost so much money he knew there would be no way for him to reclaim it for the bookies in the time they demanded.

Sure, he could have robbed a few houses with his powers, but he wasn’t allowed to use the sled or cross thresholds unless it was in the predawn hours of Christmas Day, and they hadn’t been willing to wait that long without upping the ante.

He ran his hand across his brow again and was somewhat surprised when his white glove was immediately drenched by his outpour. Looking around the room, he noticed that it was covered in family photos and mementos that spelled out what a caring father this man surely was.

“It’s not my fault, really, if it weren’t me, someone else would be sent to deal with you, and they might hurt everyone.” Santa whispered as he set the bag on the dresser and pulled out a small vial. Inside was a silver powder that, when placed over someone’s eyes, would call the ferry master to curry their spirit back to the island from which all life begins and ends.

He’d won the vial from Death in a card game two centuries ago. The best thing about the powder was that it was a direct contract between him and Death, leaving the higher powers completely out of the loop. It was a small vial, eight grams at the most, but it must have weighed at least ten pounds. Part of that was because so little dust was needed. He could kill someone every year and it still wouldn’t be enough to drain his supply for a few more centuries, if he and Christmas survived that long.

The father may have been wonderful and supporting, but as in most things, it had been the wife that had messed everything up. According to the man who had made the arrangements, the mother, Andrea, had once worked for the bookie as a money runner. One day she had simply disappeared with the profits, walking away with over half a million dollars right before a major game.

They hadn’t been able to find her using traditional methods, but apparently when he’d been drunk one night with the girls Santa had divulged the fact that he knew where everyone who was living was, no matter what name changes or plastic surgery they’d undergone. It all came as part of the package. After all, he had to have a list of all the naughty and nice girls and boys. Most people thought that ended at some predetermined age, but in truth he kept up with them right up until the point of their deaths.

He sighed as he looked down on her sleeping face, knowing that he could walk away right now and that nothing would happen. In all truth, the mobsters he owed money to would never be able to find him, and he had all kinds of magic at his disposal. It wouldn’t take much to hide himself from them until long after their deaths. But that would mean he couldn’t use his vacations for the kind of pleasurable activities he enjoyed for another half a century or more.

And the thought of living with nothing but that frigid woman he called wife for fifty years before he was able to have wild, rampaging sex, was more than he could bear. He called up the face of his favorite girl and held it in the front of his mind as he sprinkled a small amount of powder on Andrea’s eyes.

She sneezed, sighed, and rolled over just as he heard the faint ding of the ferry’s bell. Death wouldn’t be instantaneous, but she would be gone before the New Year was celebrated in this house.

Her spirit had been promised to his colleague, and there was nothing he could do now.

Wiping his face once more with the back of his hand to keep the sweat out of his eyes, he packed up his supplies and headed back to the tree.

It wasn’t until he was halfway down the stairs that he realized Janey was awake. He could feel her staring at him from beneath the Christmas tree like Cindy Lou Who from that children’s book about the Grinch.

“Whatcha doin’ Santa?” she asked, stepping toward him. He shook his head and tried to think. She wasn’t supposed to wake up, the chant was supposed to keep her asleep until he was on the roof.

When he didn’t respond, she took another step.

“The tree is down here, and you were up there.” She pointed at the hallway just behind him, and in his mind he could feel the others stirring, waking up from their magically held slumber.

“Just spreading Christmas cheer, my dear.” He replied as he closed his eyes and whispered the words that would carry him back to the sleigh. He counted to ten and then opened them again, but nothing had happened. One of the rules to using the chant was that he had to be in a certain proximity to the tree before he could transport back to the roof, and apparently he was not close enough now.

He ran down the last few steps, nearly knocking over the little girl that had worked her way so close to him, skidding to a stop just between the tree and the coffee table. Once more he chanted the words he’d used for so many centuries, and once more nothing happened.

Now the entire family stood in front of him on the stairway. Plus one that had joined them from the shadows.

“I always thought the scythe was a little much, you know?”

Death laughed, his dry cackle vibrating through the air. “It was never my idea, you know that.”

“What are you doing here?” Santa asked, all thoughts of escape lost in the bizarre circumstances.

“That’s what I asked you.” Little Janey answered, giggling. “But you were trying to kill my mommy. Bad Santa.” She said, putting her hands on her hips and wagging her finger at him.

“What the fuck?”

“Language! We are, after all, in the presence of children.” Death scolded, his red eyes glaring from underneath his cowl.

Santa was so stunned by this new development that he couldn’t think of a reply. The silence was finally cut by Janey’s shrill laugh.

“I mean it, what is going on?” Santa asked again, his voice shaking.

“You’ve been promised to me, and it’s time we take a ride.” Death replied, reaching for Santa’s gloved hand with his own skeletal one.

Santa jerked back, “Not me, her. I put the dust on her.” He pointed up at Andrea, who also broke out laughing.

“Of course, and she’s promised as well, but not now, not until her time. That was the deal that the higher ups brokered with her when they realized what you were going to do. Unfortunately, you didn’t make that same promise.”

“But I didn’t put the powder on myself.”

“Oh, but you did.” Death reached up and pointed to Santa’s sweat-glazed brow. “And it still sits on your skin.”

Santa pulled back as he realized what had happened, how he had transferred the powder from his gloved hand to his brow and how the sweat must have carried it into his glands.

“But you can’t take me, who would do the job?”

“They already have a replacement. He’s in the sled right now, delivering the gifts you neglected.” Death replied, moving forward even more until the entire house seemed to be swallowed by his darkness.

Santa tried to pull away, but when he looked down he realized that they were already in the ferry, the isle of souls ahead of them.

“At least that bitch won’t be here.” He sighed.

Since he couldn’t really smile without lips, Death was fond of using his fingers to draw out a smile on his face, which he did now.

“That’s what you think. Where you go, she goes, that was always part of the deal. Hence, when you died, she died with you.”

“You mean she’s here?”

He nodded, “I picked her up shortly after you left, and boy was she pissed about you screwing up her immortality.”

For a moment Santa looked over the boat’s side and into the inky water, knowing that if he threw himself overboard he would be completely eradicated from the land of the living and the death, lost forever to the darkness. He thought about jumping, but knew he couldn’t do it.

“Hell has to be better than nothing.” Santa mumbled to the water.

“I guess you’ll have to let me know.” Death said as they docked the boat, Mrs. Claus was already approaching them from across the beach. “Remember, if you find you can’t take it, you can always wade into the surf.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.” Santa said as he got out of the boat, her high-pitched voice already reaching his ears as she half-ran, half-waddled, toward them.

“I’m sure you will.” Death laughed, pushing his boat away from the dock and back out into the open waters, “I’m sure you’ll think of it often.”

 

 

Christmas: Written

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

Christmas: Written

by J.S. Watts

My first post in this Giftmas Blog Tour took a peek at my personal, real life memories and experiences of Christmas. This second post goes one snow encrusted footstep further and considers how those experiences have infiltrated my writing.

As you may have gathered from my previous post, I like Christmas, but I’m not really an uber-Christmassy sort of person: moderation in all things is my motto. I have fond, rosy-glow firelight and Christmas tree fairy-lights memories of childhood Christmases. I am quite content, however, for those memories to remain in the past and for current-day Christmases to be firmly curtailed by the monthly boundary of December. I inevitably look forward to the peace after the Christmas frenzy. It has come as something of a surprise, therefore, to realise just how often my writing has touched on the subject of Christmas.

In case you don’t know, I write poetry, short stories and novels: much, but not all of them, influenced by speculative fiction themes (SF, fantasy, magic-realism, horror).

If I review my back catalogue of poems, I find just four that deal directly with the subject of Christmas or the mid-Winter Solstice and one of those is more about a werewolf than anything else (it’s in my collection, Cats and Other Myths, should you be interested). The other three take a more traditional view of Christmas, based firmly around those childhood memories of mine. Not so many, you might think, but if I consider all the poems that contain Christmas or Winter Festival imagery, the total rises to over eleven. Still not many, you might reiterate, but compare that to just one poem dealing with Firework Night, two that touch upon Halloween and none in relation to Easter.

When I look at my short stories, the developing Christmas theme becomes even more deep and crisp and even. I have, to date, written three ostensibly Christmas stories: Christmas Traditions (originally published in Ethereal Tales) – a humorous and somewhat ribald take (with added fairies and boggarts) on the possible causes of a number of accepted Christmas traditions; A Christmas Story – For The Children – is a prose poem/flash fiction hybrid, due out from Three Drops From a Cauldron this month, which brings a note of historical horror to the Christmas story; and there is A Christmas Tail – a cat’s eye perspective on a sort of version of A Christmas Carol. Like the original story by Dickens, it is a mixture of dark and light. Once again, three tales may not seem like a big deal to you, but it’s three more than any other annual festival gets in my short story portfolio.

Witchlight SmallerAs far as I can recall, Christmas does not get a look-in in my first novel, A Darker Moon. The book is just too dark and mythic (having said that, if anyone who has read it does come across a festive reference I’ve forgotten, feel free to let me know). The timeline of my paranormal novel, Witchlight, however, cuts right across the Christmas period, so there is a whole chapter in the book dedicated to Christmas.

The Christmas that Holly, the novel’s main character, and her nearest and dearest experience is very much based on my contemporary view of Christmas, rather than the shimmering tinsel memories of my childhood. To be direct, it’s not the happiest festive season ever, as the stresses and strains surrounding Holly’s newly discovered and alarmingly developing magic powers begin to take their toll. Work and family commitments conspire to make it a difficult domestic Christmas for Holly in the first place. The fact that the Winter Solstice has special “significance to witchery in general and Old Magic in particular” just serves to create further difficulties for Holly in terms of her fairy godfather and her witch of a mother. The tensions ramped up over the Winter Holiday are going to result in some dramatic and life-changing developments in the New Year.

All in all, it would seem that there’s a fair bit of Christmas sprinkled throughout my writing and the two blog posts I have written for the Giftmas Blog Tour have just added to my Christmas canon. The festive season has clearly been an influence on me. It’s not just the primary coloured and sparkly Christmas of childhood that has left its mark, though. The darker notes of my Christmas experiences also echo in my work, which, I feel, is right and proper. However special Christmas is for you, it’s also a part of real life with its inevitable ups and downs.

I hope your Christmas, Winter Solstice, Saturnalia, Giftmas, Mid-Winter Festival, call-it-what-you-will, when it comes, is mostly ups, but downs have their role to play too, because that’s life.

IMG_3815

 

 

J.S.Watts websiteJ.S.Watts is a British writer. Her poetry, short stories and book reviews appear in a wide variety of publications in Britain, Canada, Australia and the States including Acumen, Mslexia and Popshot and have been broadcast on BBC and Independent Radio. J.S. has been Poetry Reviews Editor for Open Wide Magazine and Poetry Editor for Ethereal Tales. Her debut poetry collection, Cats and Other Myths, is published by Lapwing Publications, as is a subsequent, multi-award nominated poetry pamphlet, Songs of Steelyard Sue. Her novels, A Darker Moon – dark literary fiction and Witchlight – paranormal with a touch of romance, are published in the US and UK by Vagabondage Press.  She has a new poetry collection, Years Ago You Coloured Me, due out from Lapwing in 2016. For further details see her website: www.jswatts.co.uk

 

Giftmas 2015 Giveaway:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

The Ghost of Christmas Book Blast

I recently joined the Support Indie Authors group on Goodreads and agreed to participate in their holiday free book event. On Saturday, the 19th of December, forty authors will be offering more than fifty books in a wide variety of genres absolutely free! What better way to de-stress, decompress, and take a well-deserved break from the hustle and bustle of the holidays than to curl up with a good book? Once again, all of the free books will be listed on the official Book Blast website:

www.freebookblast.com

As is their tradition, each of the authors participating in the book blast has shared a little about themselves. Below are interviews for ten of the forty participating authors. At the end of this post are links to three other blogs with the additional thirty authors. Please be sure to visit each and thank you for continuing to #SupportIndieAuthors

The Ghost of Christmas Book Blast

What is your name? Emma Woods
What genre or genres do you write in? Science Fiction, Fantasy, Dystopian/Apocalyptic, Teen & Young Adult
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Nice
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. Lea is a reluctant huntress. Tanner is her prey. When both get caught up in a war of the sexes, can they help each other survive?
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Homemade hot cocoa, as in made from scratch.
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. The Red Cross. They were wonderful when I was the victim of a natural disaster. http://www.redcross.org
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Website: https://theemmawoods.wordpress.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/theemmawoods
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theemmawoods
Other: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/emmawoods

snowflake

What is your name? M.S. L.R./Stefany Rattles
What genre or genres do you write in? Fantasy, Romance, Erotica, Teen & Young Adult
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Naughty
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. I am offering my erotic romance books Bad Romance Part 1 & 2 free. I’m also offering the first book in my Darkest Nights series – Dark Night: Episode 1 free. So if you’re into both genre’s or one or the other, you can have these books free for your starter library!
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? York Dark Chocolate Covered Peppermint Patties
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. Salvation Army http://www.salvationarmyusa.org
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Website: http://www.stefanyrattles.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/StrlngGry
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Stefany-Rattles-628466587263459
Other: http://www.amazon.com/M.S.-L.R./e/B015TL1NBO

snowflake

What is your name? GG Atcheson
What genre or genres do you write in? Urban Fantasy
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Only a Sith thinks in absolutes.
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. The Legacy: Fate: An alien named LX crashes on Earth and discovers a new breed of humans who calls themselves vampires. When fate brings a group of renegades casted out of his own planet thousands of years ago, he enlists the help of the vampires to save Earth from total annihilation.
The Legacy: Destiny: Something ancient and evil lurks under the beautiful city of Los Angeles, and it’s waiting for the right opportunity to take over the world.
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Fruit jellies.
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. When I was younger, the firefighters in my city would gather old toys, fix them, repaint them, and make them like new again. They put their heart in it. They thought no child should be without a present under the tree. So, in the spirit of the Holidays, any charity that has children in mind is my favorite.
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Twitter: https://twitter.com/GGAtcheson
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GGAtcheson/

snowflake

What is your name? Ellison Blackburn
What genre or genres do you write in? Science Fiction, Visionary/Metaphysical Fiction
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Only a Sith thinks in absolutes.
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. Regeneration X is a story about having choices and dealing with the consequences; creating new memories and letting others fade; and making sacrifices in pursuit of happiness.
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Terry’s Chocolate Orange
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. The Non-GMO Project – an organization committed to preserving and building non-GMO food sources, educating consumers. www.nongmoproject.org
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Website: http://ellisonblackburn.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Ellis_blackburn
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ellisonblackburn/
Other: http://amazon.com/author/ellisonblackburn/

snowflake

What is your name? Shoshanah Lee Marohn
What genre or genres do you write in? Humor & Satire, Poetry & Verse, Art
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Only a Sith thinks in absolutes.
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. I wrote and illustrated two books. One is a comic travel memoir called, “Avoiding Sex with Frenchmen.” The other is a sinister and lovely book of haiku poems and pen and ink drawings called, “Coloring Inside the Dreams.”
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Glög- sweet Scandinavian mulled wine with nuts and raisins.
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. It’s hard to choose, but Heifer International really helps people become independent and grow their own food. www.heifer.org
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Website: Dommn2703.blogspot.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/maddogmarohn
Facebook: Facebook.com/shoshanahart
Other: Shoshanah.space

snowflake

What is your name? Dwayne Fry
What genre or genres do you write in? Humor & Satire
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Naughty
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. I am offering two satirical novellas about intense and angry individuals.
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Mistletoe. So what if it’s poisonous?
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. Discovery Living, Inc. – A non-profit organization in Linn County Iowa, providing housing for adults with intellectual disabilities. http://www.discoveryliving.org

snowflake

What is your name? Charles Hash
What genre or genres do you write in? Science Fiction, Fantasy, Dystopian/Apocalyptic, Horror, LGBTQ
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Naughty
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. Flawed characters. Tragedy. Blood, lots of blood.
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Those tiny little oranges that are easy to peel.
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. Locks of Love, I’ve donated three times. www.locksoflove.org/
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Twitter: https://twitter.com/DecayingGoddess
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/The.Goddess.of.Decay

snowflake

What is your name? BR Kingsolver
What genre or genres do you write in? Science Fiction, Fantasy
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Naughty
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. The first two books in The Telepathic Clans Saga. The Goddess blesses Her people with 25 Telepathic Gifts. In addition to Telepathy, the Gifts include command over Air and Fire, Telekinesis and Teleportation.
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Banana pudding. It’s underrated for all occasions and should be part of the mandatory food pyramid.
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. The Polaris Project, https://polarisproject.org/ This is an organization that works to disrupt human trafficking networks, helping survivors restore their freedom, preventing more victims, and leveraging data and technology to pursue traffickers wherever they operate.
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Website: http://brkingsolver.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/BRKINGSOLVER
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/BR-Kingsolver/329557003754305
Other: http://www.amazon.com/BR-Kingsolver/e/B007XDV5OW/

snowflake

What is your name? Rhonda Parrish (Oh hey! I know her!)
What genre or genres do you write in? Dystopian/Apocalyptic, Horror, Poetry & Verse
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Nice
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. White Noise is a collection of poems from the zombie apocalypse. Tim Deal, from Shroud Magazine described it as, “A collection of vivid scenes laid out in sharp and articulate verse, that when assembled, construct a grim narrative filled with tension, stark imagery, and unusual beauty. WHITE NOISE reaches in and evokes a visceral response— not always the one you’d expect.”
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Are any holiday treats really underrated? I dunno… Some of my favourites include my husband’s Bûche de Noël, the vegetarian tourtiere we enjoy on the 24th but my absolute tippy-top favourite are butter tarts. Om nom nom!
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. I adore Fauna Foundation — http://www.faunafoundation.org/ They are Canada’s only chimpanzee sanctuary and do amazing work caring for our little cousins (and another animals as well). http://www.faunafoundation.org/
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Website: http://rhondaparrish.com/archive
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rhondaparrish
Other: http://rhondaparrish.com/archive/about/newsletter/

snowflake

What is your name? Frances Smith
What genre or genres do you write in? Fantasy
Have you been naughty or nice this year? Nice
Tell us a little about the book(or books) you are offering. A brother and sister, who are estranged from each other, come to believe their sibling is in grave danger. Each works to try and save the other, one through battle, the other through politics, each believing the other in need of rescue. They are both right.
What is your favorite underrated holiday treat? Stuffing. I can’t get enough of it.
In the spirit of giving, tell us about your favorite charitable organization. The Fire Fighters Charity, helping injured fire fighters in the UK.
Where can readers find out more and connect with you?
Website: http://francessmithauthor.wix.com/frances-smith

Check out some of the other people hosting this book blast and find out more about the participants 🙂

~ Christina McMullenPatricia Loofbourrow ~ A.E. Hellstorm ~

Fergus the Wonderdog’s Cheesecake

giftmas_rectangle

All month long I’m going to be hosting the posts of other people as part of my 2015 Giftmas Blog Tour. All the guest bloggers are welcome to write about anything they’d like so long as their post touched on a December holiday in some way, no matter how tangentially. The blog tour extends beyond my blog as well, and I will do my best to link to each external post from the here and share them on social media using the hashtag #GiftmasTour.

But wait! There’s more!

We’re also giving away a whole whack of prizes (check out the list here) which you can enter to win using the Rafflecoper code below. Whatever December holiday you celebrate (or don’t) winning a stack of books will make it better!

 

Fergus the Wonderdog’s Cheesecake

by E.C. Bell

I love baking, especially in winter. I bake cookies, mincemeat pies (really), Christmas cakes (really!), and often, for the Christmas meal, I bake a cheesecake.

This recipe comes from a recipe book my Mom used (a lot) while we were growing up. I didn’t even realize it was fairly complicated until I checked out other recipes online, but it is still one of the best tasting cheesecakes I’ve found.

Fergus the Wonderdog’s Cheesecake
1 (6oz) package zwieback (graham crackers to most people)
1/4 c soft butter
1 c plus 2 tablespoons sugar
1/4 teaspoons cinnamon
1 pound cream cheese
1 cup light cream
2 tablespoons flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
3/4 teaspoon grated lemon rind

Topping
I use cherry pie filling, with a touch of grated lemon rind warmed into it. Cranberry sauce is good, too.

Roll or grind the zwieback. Mix with the soft butter, 2 tablespoons of sugar and the cinnamon. Grease a 10×21/2 inch spring form pan generously with the butter and pat the crumb mixture on the bottom and up the sides of the pan.

Soften the cream cheese and stir in the cream, add the remaining sugar which has been mixed with flour and salt. Beat egg yolks until thick and light. Fold these in carefully and flavour with vanilla and lemon rind. Beat the egg whites to soft peaks and fold in. Pour into the crust.

Bake in a moderately slow oven, 325 degrees, for an hour, and then leave in the oven another hour with heat off. Cool thoroughly, but under no circumstances place it on the frozen water barrel outside your back door in the middle of winter to hurry the cooling process.

Once it is cooled, top with your favourite berry topping, and enjoy!

Okay, now the story.

It was Christmas Eve, 1983, and I had this dog, see? (Do you know how many of my stories start this way?) Fergus was a red boned hound that we got from the SPCA the year before, and he was a wonderful dog. (That wasn’t why we called him Fergus the Wonderdog, though. We called him that because he’d managed to live through a bout of Parvo he came down with one month after we got him. But that’s another story.)

Since we lived on a farm, he was mostly an outside dog. (We let him sleep inside most winter nights, but the rest of the time he spent in the great outdoors.) So, Fergus was outside, and I was prepping the dessert for the Bell family Christmas Eve meal, traditionally held at my parent’s house.

I had decided to make cheesecake, from a recipe I’d found in Mom’s best cook book. It was the first time I’d ever tried the recipe, and of course I didn’t read the whole thing before I started. I nearly lost it when I realized I was supposed to let it cool for at least two hours before plating. I had barely an hour before we had to leave.

So… I set the cheesecake outside, on the ice-filled water barrel by our back door, to cool it quickly. It was really cold that year, and I figured that just a few minutes would do the trick.

Five minutes later, I opened the door to check and caught Fergus, up on his hind legs, leaning against the water barrel. Steam billowed from his cheesecake-covered muzzle. The remains of my beautiful cheesecake was a white volcanic eruption in a spring form pan between his front paws. He smiled as only a dog can smile, then blinked twice and broke for safer ground when I started to yell.

I don’t remember what I took to replace the cheesecake at the family Christmas Eve meal, but the story more than made up for the lack of dessert. And from that moment on, this has been known as Fergus the Wonderdog’s cheesecake.

Happy holidays!

Bio: Eileen (E.C.) Bell’s debut paranormal mystery novel Seeing the Light (2014) won the BPAA award for Best Speculative Fiction Book of the Year, and was shortlisted for the Bony Blythe Award for Light Mystery. The second book in the series, Drowning in Amber, was released into the wild at the end of October, 2015. Her short fiction includes the Aurora Award winning Women of the Apocalypse and The Puzzle Box. When she’s not writing, she’s living a fine life in her round house with her husband and two dogs.

Website: www.eileenbell.com
Twitter: @apocalypse woman
Facebook:www.facebook.com/eileen.bell.90

Giftmas 2015 Giveaway:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

I write, I edit and I take a lot of naps.

Malcare WordPress Security